Secondly, an indeterminate but small number of internees were not volunteers.
Clearly, there was barbed wire and constraints on the internees' freedom but there was also a high degree of selfgovernment within the camp.
There were no housing or sanitary facilities for the internees.
The altar was to be in the centre, so that all the internees could see it and hear mass from every corner of the building.
Unfortunately, internees' ages were not published.
Another 10 per cent with different names had shared a home with one or more fellow internees, and an additional 8 per cent lived adjacent to one or more rebels.
As this reveals little difference between the two results, and as it can be confirmed that most of the internees were indeed volunteers, the numbers seem acceptable.
The release of the internees is not a concession or a negotiable factor.